Summertime for Gershwin
In the South, the Gullah struggle to keep their traditions alive
- By Whitney Dangerfield
- Smithsonian.com, June 01, 2007, Subscribe
In Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina, along Highway 17, a middle-aged African American man sits on a lawn chair in the afternoon sun, a bucket of butter-colored strands of sweet grass at his feet. Little by little, he weaves the grass together into a braided basket. Beside him, more than 20 finished baskets hang on nails along the porch of an abandoned home converted into a kiosk. Like generations before, he learned this custom from his family, members of the Gullah Geechee nation. This distinct group of African Americans, descendants of West African slaves, have inhabited the Sea Islands and coastal regions from Florida to North Carolina since the 1700s.
Today sweet grass is harder to come by in Mt. Pleasant. Beach resorts and private residences have restricted access to its natural habitat along the coast. For the past 50 years, such commercial and real estate development has increasingly encroached upon the Gullah and Geechee way of life throughout the South. Now the federal government has passed a Congressional Act to protect their traditions, naming the coastal area from Jacksonville, Florida, to Jacksonville, North Carolina, the Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor and committing $10 million over ten years to the region. The project is still in its infancy. As the National Parks Service selects a commission to oversee the corridor, the Gullah and the Geechee wait to feel its impact.
In the early 1900s, long before developers and tourists discovered the area, Gullah family compounds—designed like African villages—dotted the land. A matriarch or patriarch kept his or her home in the center, while children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren lived around the perimeter. The family grew fruits and vegetables for food, and the children ran free under the protective watch of a relative never too far away. They spoke a Creole language called Gullah—a mixture of Elizabethan English and words and phrases borrowed from West African tribes.
Their ancestors had come from places like Angola and Sierra Leone to the American South as slaves during an agricultural boom. Kidnapped by traders, these slaves were wanted for their knowledge of cultivating rice, a crop that plantation owners thought would thrive in the humid climate of the South's Low Country.
After the Union Army made locations such as Hilton Head Island and St. Helena northern strongholds during the Civil War, General William Tecumseh Sherman granted the slaves freedom and land under Special Field Order No. 15. The proclamation gave each freed slave family a mule and 40 acres of land in an area 30 miles from the Atlantic Ocean that ran along the St. John's River. The orders, which were in effect for only a year, prohibited white people from living there. The descendants of these freed West African slaves came to be known as Geechee in northern Georgia and Gullah in other parts of the Low Country. They lived here in relative isolation for more than 150 years. Their customs, their life along the water and their Gullah language thrived.
Yet real estate development, high taxes and loss of property have made the culture's survival a struggle. For many years after the Civil War, Gullah land "was considered malaria property. Now it has become prime real estate," says Marquetta Goodwine, a St. Helena native also known as Queen Quet, the chieftess of the Gullah Geechee Nation. "In the 1950s, there started an onslaught of bridges. The bridges then brought the resorts. I call it destruction; other people call it development."
Over the next few decades, construction continued and the Gullah people could no longer access the water to travel by boat. "At first it wasn't bothering anybody. People thought this is just one resort," says Queen Quet. "People started putting two and two together. It was just like our tide. It comes in real, real slow and goes out real, real slow. It's so subtle."
Although many Gullah did not have clear titles to the land, their families had lived there for generations, which enabled their ancestors to inherit the property. Others had free access to areas controlled by absent landowners. As the value of the property heightened, taxes increased, forcing many to leave the area. In other cases, outsiders bought deeds out from under the families.
"A lot of the land that is now being developed was literally taken, and in many instances, illegally," says Representative James Clyburn of South Carolina, whose wife is of Gullah origin. They began not only to lose their homes but also their burial grounds and places of worship. Soon, as waterfront properties became even more valuable, they lost access to the sweet grass, which grows in the coastal dunes of this area.
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Comments (10)
There is one special feature that my family has most of us are born with a sixth digit on our pinky finger wonder if that is a possible way to find our lost part of our family tree???? are there others of gullah culture who share this feature
Posted by Gloria Sanders on January 27,2012 | 12:47 AM
I was told that my grand parents are Gullah/Geechee people ,at my grandmothers 100th birthday party it really is good to know where we are from ,it took a long time to find our roots but well worth the wait.grand daughter of florrie Williams - Jackson
Posted by Gloria Sanders on January 27,2012 | 12:19 AM
Only a "ditto head" would know the money is so they can weave grass baskets, when the fact are it will employ people to archive the history, preserve the natural resources and provide economic opportunities for the greater good of those descendant people and the rest of us.
Posted by Robert Haarman on February 11,2011 | 01:09 PM
Ten million dollars of tax payer's money is being spent so baskets can continue to be weaved from grass, only in America.
Posted by Curious on May 29,2010 | 09:40 AM
More of a question than a comment. Speaking with a friend (82 years old,who distinctly remembers his grand parents saying that there was a "swap" of slaves from the Americas to the caribbean islands; Trinidad & Tobago being one of the islands, and the island folks calling the new group of slaves "mericins" who spoke differently from the then Trini slaves. Is there any truth to this ?
Posted by Glen Skeete on March 6,2010 | 05:38 PM
First of all, allow me to suggest that we start at the Archives or Chamber of Commerce of each of the jurisdictions and determine if the true history can be obtained.
I am retired Chief engineerbut have relatives in louisiana and would be delightyed to persue this issue.
Posted by John Epperson on February 21,2010 | 04:03 PM
Please provide me with dates of Gullah events so I can attend with my family. We are from Newberry County, SC. Thanks.
Posted by RHONDA WILLIAMS on February 6,2010 | 10:18 PM
Please keep me posted on events; I live in the Maryland region and not far from Washington, DC. If there's anything I can do to assist, please let me know.
Native of Jacksonville, NC
Posted by Lesliee S. Whitfield Negash on January 6,2010 | 05:05 PM
I would like email,flyer of all dates and locations of Gulla/Geechee Nation current events.I plan to attend and would appereciate a map of the location and various way to get there.
Posted by mary triplett on August 12,2009 | 12:18 AM
So thankful that Queen Quet appeared on the scene before it was too late for the Gullah/Geechee people! They are a huge part of the heart and soul of this country. In my estimation far too much has already occurred to erode this precious people and their culture. Land developers have taken cruel, deceptive advantage of their purity of spirit and lack of familiarity with the true value of their properties. It is infuriating! What can be done! Thank God for the motivating and concsiousness raising labors of Queen Quet and those who work with her in whatever way they can.
Posted by Andrea Westmoreland on June 22,2009 | 08:27 AM